LSAT Advanced | $1399 introductory price
Study the most difficult content on the LSAT with your high-scoring peers.
Do you expect to attend a top law school? Then experience LSAT Advanced. Taught by 99th percentile instructors, this course focuses entirely on the most complex content on the LSAT, including those problems most often missed by students scoring in the 90th percentile or higher. Because Kaplan is committed to giving students the most targeted preparation possible, a score of 158 or higher on a previous LSAT exam, free Kaplan practice test, or in-class diagnostic test is required to be eligible for this course.
Why LSAT Advanced
- Learn from our highly-trained 99th percentile faculty.
- Target problems most often missed by top students.
- Move at the fast pace expected by high-scorers.
- Practice with 5,400+ real LSAT questions, plus our exclusive explanations and difficulty rankings for every question.
- Focus on your areas of greatest opportunity with our exclusive.
Smart Reports™ online score analysis and personalized recommendation system.
- More people get into law school with a Kaplan LSAT course than all other major courses combined.†
- Score higher on the LSAT – guaranteed or your money back!
Course Structure
LSAT Advanced is 80 prep hours (56 instructional hours + 24 exam hours) spread across 20 sessions. It includes:
- 10 classrooms sessions
- 6 recent, full-length LSAT practice tests, proctored under realistic conditions
- 4 topic-based workshops
Additional Features
- Exclusive proven score-raising strategies and resources
- Free Classroom makeup sessions, either online or in Kaplan Centers
- Access to more than 30 online workshops
- Full access to any Kaplan Center
- 7-day-a-week academic support on our LSAT Instructor Hotline
†People refers to adults who took the LSAT and a course to prepare for it, were accepted into Law
School and participated in the survey. The Harris Interactive® online study for Kaplan conducted between
December 6th and 21st, 2007 among 149 US adults who applied to and were admitted into Law School, of whom
125 took the LSAT and a course to prepare for it.